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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel a little heartbroken about having a boy

408 replies

bm2b · 03/09/2025 20:52

I already have a daughter and recently found out that this baby is a boy. I feel incredibly grateful to be pregnant again, and I know how lucky I am to be carrying a healthy baby. I already love him, and I know I’ll adore him completely when he arrives. But I’ve been caught off guard by this quiet feeling of sadness that I didn’t expect.

I’m very close to my mum. We speak every day, go on little trips together, help each other out, and are part of each other’s daily lives. I’ve started to build something similar with my daughter, even though she’s still young, and I suppose I imagined continuing that dynamic with another girl.

With a boy, I’m not sure what that relationship will look like in the long term. In so many families I’ve seen, sons gradually become more distant from their parents as they get older, especially once they have partners and children of their own. It often ends up being the wife’s parents who are more involved, while his own mum becomes more of an occasional visitor.

Of course there are exceptions. I can think of the odd “friend of a friend’s cousin” whose son stayed close and prioritised both sides of the family equally, or doesn’t automatically side with his partner when she’s being unfair. But in my experience, that feels like the exception rather than the norm.

I also worry about what raising a boy will be like day to day. I know it’s a stereotype, but the boys I’ve been around — nephews, friends’ kids — tend to be more energetic, more physical, and more chaotic. I’m a bit afraid I won’t enjoy that stage as much, or that I won’t know how to connect with him in the same way.

If anyone has felt this way too, I’d love to hear from you. Especially mums of older boys — did the bond end up being just as close, even if it looked a bit different? What parts of having a son surprised you in a good way?

OP posts:
ucandmykids · 03/09/2025 21:30

Boys are the best. He’ll be so much more loving than your dd believe me

Mummyto3ginismyfriend · 03/09/2025 21:30

I felt the same gender disappointment.
My first baby was a boy and still born.
I then went on to have 2 more planned babies. Both were boys. I was disappointed when the youngest was a boy. I then had a surprise baby and that turned out to be my daughter.
I'm the closest to my middle child, my loving caring, sweet boy. My eldest son is wonderful too but more distant (although he is a teenager now)
My daughter is also wonderful but is a daddy's girl and much closer to him. She is also autistic and I had the same fears about the boys leaving and getting closer to their spouses parents etc.
I don't know if DD will ever have the marriage and life we envision for our daughters. But I've come to peace that I will always be there for all 3 and try to encourage a close bond no matter what.
What I'm trying to say is that you cannot control what sort of relationship you'll have with any of your children no matter what their gender and you love them no matter what genitals they have.

marchmash · 03/09/2025 21:30

Fully agree with the last poster: it's a person! I think birth order plays as much a role as sex (e.g. older one is more achieving, people pleasing and second one is more questioning and controversial). Have to say that adolescence has been much harder with my DD! My DS was very sweet and not hectic/super active as a kid, he was more into trains and lego etc. I got irritated with the ridiculous comments about 'boy' things and 'girl' things. I think it's nice to have one of both, or two of one, or whatever. Don't let stupid stereotypes bother you. I did really want a girl and my DH wanted a boy, how does your partner feel? Presumably he is also happy to have one of each?

Enigma54 · 03/09/2025 21:31

Heartbroken? Really? OP, we are talking human life, the greatest gift. It’s a privilege to be able to bring life into the world, not a right. I speak as a parent of a girl and a boy. My DS ( now 17) is smart, witty and hard working. DD the same. Both are unique and I adore them
both. You will too.

HedwigIsMySpiritAnimal · 03/09/2025 21:31

Dundonia · 03/09/2025 21:01

I kind of get it. I have two girls. I’m not having any more children but a big factor in that is that I don’t really want a boy. I know there are exceptions and it’s not a hard and fast rule but a lot of the time what you describe about future relationships is pretty spot on.

“Boy moms” (you know, the weird and creepy ones, not all mums of boys) make me roll my eyes. I’m getting this in before they descend on this thread and start putting down little girls (rather than talking about the wonders of little boys).

Edited

What the fuck is a “weird and creepy” boy mum? 🙄 I’ve got nothing negative to say about girls - but lots to say about smug mums of girls who make horrible comments about not having another baby for fear of having a boy 🙄. They’re weird and creepy.

Birthoptionss · 03/09/2025 21:31

Hi, I’m a mum to three boys (all under the age of 5). When I was pregnant with my first, I really wanted a girl. Everything changed once my eldest was born and by the second I was hoping for another boy and by the third I was practically begging for it to be another boy. I’m very girly and everybody always seems so shocked to hear that I genuinely wasn’t ‘going for the girl’, this is truly because boys are the bloody best. I adore them and they are my pride and absolute joy. Your feelings will drastically change.

Redburnett · 03/09/2025 21:32

Boys are great and I am sure you will be helping to make a decent man for the future (unlike the many not so decent men we read about on MN).

Hedgehogbrown · 03/09/2025 21:32

Maray1967 · 03/09/2025 21:24

I have two sons, 25 and 17, and I have never wished they were girls. The eldest has moved out and yes, he and GF do live closer to her parents, but we see them plenty and they both seem keen to come here. They do both houses on Christmas Day!

I loved Star Wars light sabre battles in the garden, nerf gun parties, taking several boys to Alton Towers.

What I am glad I have not had to deal with (as most of my friends with DDs have) are endless fallings out with friends and associated dramas.

And yes, they are stereotypes, but I don’t know a single DM/DD who spent hours in the garden acting out Star Wars scenes like we did.

My advice based on observation of a relationship I know well is … don’t say in the presence of your DS that you really wanted another girl. It does not work out well.

Yes because girls can't have nerf guns or go to Alton Towers.

Lotsofpots · 03/09/2025 21:33

bm2b · 03/09/2025 21:15

Yes, I have a brother and a sister. My sister is really close to our mum — they talk every day, go shopping together, and she always invites her to the kids’ events or just over for a chat “because she was nearby.” They have this natural, everyday closeness in the same way I do with her.

My brother’s relationship with our mum is very different. He’s not distant or unkind, but everything is more formal and a bit hands-off. Any visits are arranged well in advance and usually come with a time slot, “we can do Sunday, but just from 12 to 3.” And I know his wife doesn’t appreciate it when my mum “oversteps” by bringing food or asking if she should help with pickups. Meanwhile, his wife’s parents are round all the time — her mum picks the kids up from school, drops off little meals, even goes on holiday with them. Our mum doesn’t get that same level of access. I know my brother asked about mum coming to one of the kids’ plays and the wife said there’s not enough tickets - her parents went.

It’s the same story in my husband’s family. He has a sister who’s incredibly close to their mum — constant calls, spontaneous visits etc. My husband’s relationship with her is friendly, but distant by comparison. And not because he doesn’t care, but just because he’s not as naturally in that rhythm, he’s busy with work and in all honesty I find her a bit overstepping when she does some things my mum does, and some things she does with her own daughter. I think everyone is just more welcoming of their own mum.

And I think that’s the case in most families I’ve seen — the woman tends to set the tone for how involved grandparents are, and understandably, she leans toward her own side. So yes, seeing that dynamic play out in both of our families (and most friends) does shape how I’m feeling now. Not because I think boys love their mums any less but because I’m afraid I just won’t get to stay as close.

There is so much to unpick here. I come back to my earlier point “it’s not boys, it’s families”.

Of course I’m closer to my parents than my in laws, but I don’t treat them any differently. If I feel my MIL is overstepping when she does something that my own DM does, I reflect on myself rather than distancing her. And I chose to marry someone who loved his parents and actively involves them in his/our life - I can’t imagine being with someone who didn’t have this relationship (assuming his parents weren’t toxic). It’s part of my value base.
And seeing my in laws love for our DC is just wonderful.

rather than assuming that your brother’s relationship with your DM is because of his sex, or his wife, maybe you should look at how your DM treats him compared to you and your sister, including when you were children. My anecdotal experience is that boys who are raised to anticipate closeness, who are involved with both sides of grandparents, whose parents revel in being in their company, are less likely to marry someone who can easily distance them from a family they were previously close to.

You and your DP set the tone for your son as he grows up. Worth remembering when you think about how involved your MIL is compared to your own DM, and the standards you hold your DH to in his relationships with his family.

Conniebygaslight · 03/09/2025 21:34

You only get out what you put in OP. We are blessed with 2 of each now young adults and very close to them all. It peaked and troughed through their younger years but they are all (and have always been) our greatest ever achievement

Dundonia · 03/09/2025 21:35

HedwigIsMySpiritAnimal · 03/09/2025 21:31

What the fuck is a “weird and creepy” boy mum? 🙄 I’ve got nothing negative to say about girls - but lots to say about smug mums of girls who make horrible comments about not having another baby for fear of having a boy 🙄. They’re weird and creepy.

Haha the weird and creepy ones are the ones who say shit like “oh I love feeling all tiny when he hugs me with his big arms 🥰”

Branleuse · 03/09/2025 21:35

How awful for you. A baby boy. Its like the booby prize isnt it.

Condolences 🙏

Novs · 03/09/2025 21:35

I suppose the advantage of knowing the sex in advance is that you have time to shake off that disappointment. Imagine being disappointed when you gave birth to a healthy baby.
I do get it though. I didn't find out the sex of the first but second time round I knew deep down I wanted another boy and if it was to be a girl I'd have time to get used to it.
I was thrilled to have a second boy. He's 27 now.

Fetchthevet · 03/09/2025 21:35

Two healthy children - you are so lucky.

BurntBroccoli · 03/09/2025 21:36

Boys are amazing!

CallmePaul · 03/09/2025 21:36

Odd view tbh, I was a son & my mum was awesome we got on brilliantly.

I don't think I'll get on worse or better with my own daughter than if I'd have had a son. Apart from perhaps the hormonal teen years which I'm dreading!

Moonquarter · 03/09/2025 21:37

Surprised no-one has posted yet…I’m youngest girl (no brothers) and I don’t have a tight knit relationship with my mum. We get along and have no drama, we’re in family chats, but we are completely different people. Mum has a closer relationship with my older sister, they have more same interests.

sundayfundayclub · 03/09/2025 21:37

And I think that’s the case in most families I’ve seen — the woman tends to set the tone for how involved grandparents are, and understandably, she leans toward her own side

I don't see that in my life, both sets of gps are involved or whichever set is closer but perhaps because as I said myself & people I know are just happy for as much help as possible.
I don't know anyone who would think their in-laws are overstepping because they are offering to do pickups, they would bite their hand off! But equally I would never expect my parents to do every single pick up & they wouldn't either as they have their own lives.

deadpan · 03/09/2025 21:37

bm2b · 03/09/2025 20:52

I already have a daughter and recently found out that this baby is a boy. I feel incredibly grateful to be pregnant again, and I know how lucky I am to be carrying a healthy baby. I already love him, and I know I’ll adore him completely when he arrives. But I’ve been caught off guard by this quiet feeling of sadness that I didn’t expect.

I’m very close to my mum. We speak every day, go on little trips together, help each other out, and are part of each other’s daily lives. I’ve started to build something similar with my daughter, even though she’s still young, and I suppose I imagined continuing that dynamic with another girl.

With a boy, I’m not sure what that relationship will look like in the long term. In so many families I’ve seen, sons gradually become more distant from their parents as they get older, especially once they have partners and children of their own. It often ends up being the wife’s parents who are more involved, while his own mum becomes more of an occasional visitor.

Of course there are exceptions. I can think of the odd “friend of a friend’s cousin” whose son stayed close and prioritised both sides of the family equally, or doesn’t automatically side with his partner when she’s being unfair. But in my experience, that feels like the exception rather than the norm.

I also worry about what raising a boy will be like day to day. I know it’s a stereotype, but the boys I’ve been around — nephews, friends’ kids — tend to be more energetic, more physical, and more chaotic. I’m a bit afraid I won’t enjoy that stage as much, or that I won’t know how to connect with him in the same way.

If anyone has felt this way too, I’d love to hear from you. Especially mums of older boys — did the bond end up being just as close, even if it looked a bit different? What parts of having a son surprised you in a good way?

My son has always been more of a cuddler than his older sister. I've treated them the same essentially, doing the same things with them, having the same approach.
I noticed other people treating their sons differently to their daughters and never understood why. I actually enjoyed buying clothes for him slightly more than for my daughter. It was hard to find things that were fairly neutral/not frilly and pink for her, and then I'd see my friends sons wearing grey and black even when they were quite little.
I guess what I'm trying to say is that there's no reason why a boy won't be as interested in his mum than a girl. Unless you treat them differently.

Unicorntearsofgin · 03/09/2025 21:37

I have one of each. Honestly they are such different personalities and both are wonderful. I felt a bit nervous about having a boy having grown up with three sisters but honestly it’s wonderful.

ucandmykids · 03/09/2025 21:37

Dundonia · 03/09/2025 21:35

Haha the weird and creepy ones are the ones who say shit like “oh I love feeling all tiny when he hugs me with his big arms 🥰”

Who the fuck says that about their own sons?! 😂😂

Jaws2025 · 03/09/2025 21:37

You took a bit of a risk getting pregnant then, didn't you OP? 50/50 chance of disappointment.

Hedgehogbrown · 03/09/2025 21:40

God's sake can everyone stop talking about how boys are energetic and chaotic etc. you all sound deranged. You are stereotyping your child and you sound stupid. Do you honestly think girls have no energy? They meekly sit there and read all day long? Fuck off with this.

Mustbethat · 03/09/2025 21:40

HedwigIsMySpiritAnimal · 03/09/2025 21:31

What the fuck is a “weird and creepy” boy mum? 🙄 I’ve got nothing negative to say about girls - but lots to say about smug mums of girls who make horrible comments about not having another baby for fear of having a boy 🙄. They’re weird and creepy.

Actually I’ve seen what this person is on about. They make being a “boy mom” their whole personality, and have TikTok accounts on “my day as a boy mom”.

absolutely filled with stereotypes- mom doing laundry while the boys run rampage, she’s “cleverly” avoiding water balloons, being knocked over by a boy sprinting down the hallway, or closing the car door while carrying a tray of drinks the second before a boy skateboards past.

they absolutely set my teeth on edge. Firstly stop allowing and excusing this behaviour, secondly girls fucking skateboard, throw water balloons and do all that stuff too. Thirdly why are you the only one doing housework, where’s their dad in all this.

the whole “girls are so boring, boys make life worth living” narrative that you feel they have deliberately set up because they are overcompensating for not having a girl.

they’re people. Not stereotypes.

laesosalt · 03/09/2025 21:42

Bleugh. Boring.